Biografia dell'artista
Alfred Jensen: Pioneer of Concrete Abstract Art
Alfred Julio Jensen (1903 – 1981) represents a singular beacon in Guatemalan artistic heritage, primarily recognized for his revolutionary contribution to abstract painting—specifically, what is termed “concrete” abstract art. Born in Guatemala City on December 11, 1903, Jensen’s artistic trajectory commenced amidst a multicultural upbringing molded by Danish and German lineages. His father, Peter Jensen, was a prosperous businessman of Danish descent, while his mother, Anna Schmidt, served as a German governess entrusted to care for a French family—a confluence of influences that would permeate his worldview and subsequently shape his creative vision.
A poignant moment transpired in 1910 when Jensen’s maternal figure succumbed to illness, prompting his relocation to Horsholm, Denmark, where he resided alongside his uncle. This formative experience nurtured within him an ardent appreciation for European culture and traditions—a sensibility that would prove instrumental in shaping his artistic sensibilities. Following his secondary education in Denmark in 1917, Jensen undertook extensive voyages—serving as a ship’s cabin boy—capturing portraits of passengers and crew, refining his observational acuity and cultivating an early fascination with visual representation. Between 1921 and 1923, he pursued varied occupations encompassing cowboying and poultry farming in San Diego and Guatemala, before returning to San Diego where he functioned as a lumber salesman concurrently pursuing nighttime studies and securing a scholarship to the San Diego Fine Arts School at Balboa Park.
His artistic education truly flourished during his tenure at Balboa Park, where he studied under Hans Hofmann—a pivotal mentor who championed abstract expressionism and nurtured the careers of numerous distinguished artists across Germany and America. It was here that Jensen encountered Saidie Adler May, a discerning art collector who steadfastly supported his endeavors, accompanying her on expeditions to plumb the depths of European artistic treasures and meticulously assembling masterpieces by luminaries such as Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, Theo van Doesburg, William Baziotes, Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, Naum Gabo, and Fritz Glarner. These encounters profoundly impacted Jensen’s aesthetic sensibilities, fostering a fascination with Goethe's Color Theory—a cornerstone of his artistic approach—and inspiring him to experiment with innovative compositional techniques characterized by bold grids populated by vibrant triangles, circles, or squares executed in thick impasto—a technique that imbues his canvases with textural richness and dynamism.
Jensen’s oeuvre is distinguished by its conceptual depth, extending beyond mere visual aesthetics to grapple with intricate frameworks incorporating calligraphy and numerical systems—elements that underscore his intellectual curiosity and challenge conventional understandings of artistic expression. His work garnered considerable acclaim during a monumental retrospective organized by the Guggenheim Museum in 1961—establishing him as Guatemala’s most celebrated artist and securing his place amongst the vanguard of concrete abstract art. The legacy of Jensen's collection—distributed among the Baltimore Museum of Art, San Diego Museum of Art, and MoMA—continues to inspire artistic dialogue and scholarly investigation today.